1. STYLIFING STYLIFING Bra Socks Underwear Drawer Organizer Set Foldable Cloth Organizer Drawer Soft Fabric Dresser Drawer Divider Bins for Bra Underwear Socks Ties Lingerie(Gray-Set of 3) STYLIFING - Collapsible drawer organizers foldable design with a quality bottom zippervery easy to set up and can be folding flat to save space when not in use Decent size 32 x 32 x 10 cm 126 x 126 x 39 in organizer boxes have great size to fit your socks underwear and other items well Versatile closet organizerthree kinds of design to meet all of your storage needsgood for organizing your bra socks underweartiesetc Space saver the drawer organizer is perfect to save space for your closet drawer wardrobe and cabinet...
Martin Padgett’s first book, A Night at the Sweet Gum Head, tells the story of Atlanta’s queer liberation movement through the alternating biographies of two gay men, runaway–turned–drag queen John Greenwell and activist Bill Smith. In the excerpt below, an underage Greenwell sneaks into a bar and discovers drag. Another Believer, Eagle Portland interior, 2021, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons Huntsville, Alabama January 1971 John Greenwell could stay in Huntsville and be the town queer, or he could run away and be free, so he ran. He threw a couple of days’ worth of clothes in a cheap gray briefcase he’d had since high school, counted eleven dollars in his wallet, each bill worn down like him, and flew...
There’s still a run on the real estate agencies, as toons corner the market on choice beachfront properties. In this installment, we cover the years 1951 through 1953 – another period when suntans seemed desirable in spite of dermatologists’ advice, while the salty ocean spray provided sufficient relative humidity levels to allow audiences to easy distinguishing the abundance of sand on the screen from the periodic run of foreign legion pictures. Symphony in Slang (MGM, 6/16/51 – Tex Avery. dir.), deserves an honorable mention for purposes of this article. The film is an impressionistic marvel in compiling a seemingly never-ending assembly of visual puns on commomplace words and phrases, as a newcomer to the Pearly Gates kerflummoxes St. Peter and...
My youngest is quickly approaching his first birthday—which means he's still in the “I want to stick everything in my mouth" stage, but is also very eager to learn new things (potayto/potahto?). One thing I'm learning this second time around is that babies really don't need a lot of toys to stimulate them. My little guy is much more interested in an empty cardboard box than, say, a new toy with all the bells and whistles. I didn't realize before that with a little bit of creativity, it's not too hard to find fun sensory activities for 1-year-olds.I'm often amazed by the senses that babies start to use at this age, especially the way they learn to touch and see...
Skip to content This is the first post in a three-part series that will be examining the historical assumption of Paradox Interactive’s grand strategy computer game set in the 19th and early 20th century, Victoria II. Readers will find a number of references here to our previous discussion of one of Paradox’s other games, Europa Universalis IV, but I think this discussion will be mostly readable without having to rush back and read (or reread) the previous posts; that said much of what we discuss here will, I suspect, be more interesting if one has read the previous entries. This week, we’re going to be looking in particular at how Victoria II treats what is arguably its central game system:...